
Jilted Bride's Revenge: From Wedding Scandal to Success
Jilted Bride's Revenge: From Wedding Scandal to Success Chapter 1
The notification tone on my phone broke the silence of my dressing room. I'd been staring at my wedding dress—a Vera Wang masterpiece that had taken eighteen months to create—for the past hour, trying to decide if I should wear my grandmother's pearls or the diamond necklace my father had gifted me last Christmas.
I picked up my phone, expecting another message from the wedding planner about tomorrow's arrangements.
Instead, my screen filled with a photo that made my blood run cold.
Brody—my fiancé, my childhood sweetheart, the man I'd supported through every ambition and failure—had his lips pressed against another woman's neck. Her head was thrown back in ecstasy, her fingers tangled in his dark hair. The caption read: "Future Mrs. Wells getting a head start on wedding night practice! #NYCSociety #WeddingScandal"
My hands trembled as I scrolled through the post. There were more photos—Brody feeding her champagne in what looked like his downtown penthouse, her legs draped across his lap in the back of his Bentley, their silhouettes against the Manhattan skyline as they kissed on his rooftop terrace.
"Who is she?" I whispered to myself, though the post had already told me: "Indie Chapman, the lucky waitress who caught NYC's most eligible bachelor's eye!"
Waitress. The word burned into my mind. After all the society galas I'd endured, the business dinners I'd attended to help elevate the Wells family name, the countless nights I'd spent alone while Brody "networked"—he'd chosen a waitress for his indiscretion.
I set my phone down carefully on the vanity table, my reflection staring back at me with an expression I barely recognized. Ten years of my life had gone into building Brody Wells from a nobody into one of New York's elite. Ten years of love, support, and sacrifice—all captured in a series of intimate photos now circulating through every social circle in Manhattan.
My phone buzzed again. And again. And again.
Victoria: "Have you seen it? Call me IMMEDIATELY."
Mother: "We need to talk. Your father and I are coming over."
Wedding Planner: "Mrs. Harrison, we need to discuss tomorrow's timeline. Can you call me?"
I silenced my phone and walked to the window, looking out at the Manhattan skyline that had witnessed my entire life—and now, apparently, my public humiliation.
---
"Amber, darling, you need to eat something," my mother said, sliding a plate of untouched eggs Benedict toward me. The pre-wedding brunch at The Pierre Hotel's private dining room had been planned for weeks—a chance for both families to celebrate before tomorrow's ceremony.
I nodded mechanically and took a small bite, tasting nothing.
"Everyone's talking about it," Victoria whispered beside me, her hand firmly clasped around mine under the table. "But they're all saying how terrible he is, not you."
I noticed how the other guests kept glancing our way, their conversations dropping to whispers when they caught my eye. The pity in their expressions made my stomach turn.
"Amber." Brody's voice cut through the room as he entered, his face a perfect mask of contrition. "Can we talk privately?"
I dabbed my lips with a napkin and stood, feeling dozens of eyes tracking my movement. "Of course."
In a small antechamber off the main dining room, Brody took my hands in his. "This is all a terrible misunderstanding," he began, his eyes not quite meeting mine. "You know how the media distorts things. It was nothing—just a moment of weakness."
"A moment?" I repeated softly, thinking of the multiple locations captured in those photos. "That's not what it looked like."
"I'll make it up to you," he promised, squeezing my hands. "After we're married, things will settle down. We'll go to Bali for our honeymoon, just like we planned."
I studied his face—the face I'd loved since childhood—and noticed how his primary concern seemed to be damage control rather than genuine remorse. He wasn't thinking about how I felt; he was thinking about how to salvage the situation.
"Amber?" he prompted when I didn't respond. "Say something."
---
The drive back to my family's estate in Greenwich was peaceful compared to the chaos of the brunch. My father sat beside me in the back of our family car, his presence solid and reassuring.
"You don't have to go through with this," he said quietly as we turned onto the long driveway lined with oak trees. "No one would blame you if you called it off."
I watched the familiar landscape of my childhood home come into view—the manicured gardens, the stately columns of the main house, the pool where Brody and I had first kissed when we were sixteen.
"It's not just about the affair," I said finally, surprising myself with the clarity of my thoughts. "It's how he reacted to being caught. He's more worried about tomorrow's wedding than about how he hurt me."
My father nodded slowly, his eyes reflecting the same steel I'd inherited from him.
"What will you do?" he asked as we pulled up to the house.
I looked up at my bedroom window, where I could see my wedding dress hanging in preparation for tomorrow's ceremony.
"I'm going to think," I replied, a strange calm settling over me. "And then I'm going to decide what Amber Harrison does next."
Jilted Bride's Revenge: From Wedding Scandal to Success of Contents
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